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Kent Babin
@kentb
Are 6-10 episode series the ideal visual storytelling device? There's ample time to build character, have multiple plot twists, and have mini arcs within episodes. I've more or less stopped watching new movies, except on airplanes. There's only so much you can do in 90 mins. I often find myself saying, "That would've been so much better as a series."
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Tokenized Human
@tokenizedhuman
I still find that a lot. I hink I'm yet to see a tight, multiple episode series that couldn't have benefitted from having some fat trimmed off. Breaking bad is full of really bad soap opera moments I think could easily be cut out to make it better. Even in six one hour episodes there's going to be stuff you can lose to make the overall piece better.
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Kent Babin
@kentb
Hadn't thought of it that way. Makes total sense. Series run into trouble when they start going multiple seasons for no reason other than to make money. The story gets to convoluted and you end up needing filler. Either we need to go back to the 4-hour movie epic format or start producing 4-part miniseries. πŸ˜‚
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Tokenized Human
@tokenizedhuman
I think four one hour episodes is probably enough. Obviously it depends entirely on the story, but It's going to be a struggle keeping everything relevant in that time frame. I need to watch Chernobyl , which i haven't seen yet, and rewatch the wire, because I remember a lot of that being relevant in some way. That was five series long though so there is bound to be some stuff in it taht can be cut. Plus a lot of these series have to fill time slots so it's kind of difficult to avoid it. Now that I'm thinking about it, the first season of Fargo was filled with weird one scene filler pieces taht went nowhere as well. I thought that series was so badly directed too but that's a whole other conversation πŸ˜‚
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Kent Babin
@kentb
There has also been a big shift in the way series are constructed. Pre-streaming, they were built for TV with ads and episodes once per week (at least in North America... the UK seemed to master the miniseries early). Fargo, breaking bad and the like fit that mold. The scarcity factor made filler acceptable, I think. The Blacklist is a great example. So repetitive when you watch multiple episodes per day/week. Could've wrapped that show up in 2-3 seasons. With streaming and binge watching, a good series has to feel more like a long movie.
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